Litton’s Commissions Prompt Greek Probe
Litton Industries Inc. is being investigated by the Greek government to determine whether the U.S. defense contractor made illegal payments to win Greek defense contracts, Greek Embassy officials said. Greece will look at whether Litton broke any laws when it paid $12 million in commissions to consultants regarding about $150 million in sales of F-16 fighter-jet equipment to the Greek government in 1993, said Achilles Paparsenos, a spokesman for the Greek Embassy in Washington. He didn’t identify the consultants. “A public prosecutor has started a preliminary investigation to determine if any laws were violated,” Paparsenos said. Litton declined to comment. The Justice Department also is investigating Litton’s payments to foreign consultants, and the reporting of those payments to the U.S., in connection with sales to Taiwan, Greece and possibly South Korea. Litton has agreed to pay a multimillion-dollar penalty to avoid federal criminal charges in connection with the payments, a person familiar with the U.S. investigation said last week. Shares of Woodland Hills-based Litton fell 94 cents to close at $68.38 on the New York Stock Exchange.
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